PINK FLOYD

ATOM HEART MOTHER

ULTRADISC II  MFSL UDCD 595

Made in USA

Release Date: January 1994
                        

24kt Gold Plated



 

Tracks: Time:
   
1. Atom Heart Mother
a) Father's Shout
b) Breast Milky
c) Mother Fore
d) Funky Dung
e) Mind Your Throats Please
f) Remergence
23:51
2. If   4:24
3. Summer '68   5:26
4. Fat Old Sun   5:17
5. Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast
a) Rise And Shine
b) Sunny Side Up
c) Morning Glory
12:56
   
Total Time: 51:54
   
   
   

 

 

Pink Floyd:
 
David Gilmour (vocals, guitar,)
Roger Waters (vocals, bass,)
Richard Wright (keyboards,vocals)
Nick Mason (drums,)
 

Additional personnel: 

John Aldiss Choir (vocals)





ATOM HEART MOTHER 
is a collaboration between Pink Floyd and avant-garde composer Ron Geesin. 

Recorded at EMI Studios-Abbey Road, London, England.

When rock operas by the Kinks and the Who were relatively new and Deep Purple was working with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Pink Floyd entered the 70's with ATOM HEART MOTHER, a symphonic endeavor whose centerpieces are two long compositions divided up into movements. 

Starting out as a chord sequence written by David Gilmour, the title track became a sprawling masterpiece co-written and arranged by Scottish composer Ron Geesin. 

Throughout twenty minutes of movements titled "Breast Milky," "Funky Dung" and "Mind Your Throat Please," grandiose brass sections bubble over, otherworldly choruses strike a chord of impending doom and individual Floyd contributions pop up amid all the orchestration. 

The other sprawling piece, "Alan's Psychedelic Breakfast," starts out with the sounds of someone puttering about in his home and occasionally muttering to himself, broken up by either the swirling keyboards of Richard Wright or the dulcet tones of David Gilmour's acoustic guitar. 

The remaining three tracks are Roger Waters' folky ballad "If," the baroque psychedelic pop of Wright's "Summer '68" and Gilmour's "Fat Old Sun," where the guitarist's singing sounds uncannily like Ray Davies.


Editorial reviews 
4 Stars - Excellent - ...criminally underrated--the long title suite, benefitting from Ron Geesin's crazed but accomplished musical wit, is among their best work...
Q Magazine (01/01/1995)

 

 

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